Fishing & hunting are becoming more expensive pastimes.
What can anglers and hunters do to take the edge off their outdoor cravings. It's simple, and much like my need for a fishing or hunting fix when I was a kid. If a round-the-world trip cost only $10, I couldn't get out of Clio, my home town.
Each year I managed to squirrel away money to pay for subscriptions to Field & Stream, Outdoor Life and Sports Afield magazines. I devoured every word, and then as my meager job paid a bit more money or I took a second job, I joined the old Outdoor Life Book Club. Once a month would come a notice about an upcoming book, and if I thought I'd like it, the book would be ordered. Mind you, being entertained in your mind through the magic of the written word and a wonderful photograph isn't quite the same as actually fishing or hunting, but it provides an escape for those sportsmen who financially can't shake look $200 or more for a weekend fishing or hunting trip. Books can provide that escape we need to visit another world, to a place where fish bite and where big bucks are abundant. It can take us to places where big browns sip flies off the surface, where grouse and woodcock inhabit tag alder runs and dogwood thickets, to places where rooster pheasants cackle in mid-air, and a wedge of bluebills skim the tops of white-flecked waves under a pewter-grey sky.Books can carry an angler or hunter away on a voyage of the mind.
Books carry us along on a voyage of discovery, to a place where vicariously, we could have fished alongside Ernie Schwiebert, listened to the tales of Robert Ruark's Old Man talking to the boy. Now, because of books, we can learn about Louis Spray and the meanderings of his life, to the Green Hills of Africa with Ernest Hemingway (Spray and Hemingway both committed suicide), to the wonderfully written books of the incomparable George Bird Evans.
We can read and inherit the love of hunting from the late Jack O'Connor, whose books are steadily increasing in price. O'Connor has almost as many fans now as he did 50 years ago, and his skill at writing hunting stories was legendary. Book catalogs that deal with fishing and hunting titles are wondrous things and I get a few every month. Name the genre, and there are books out there to fit the wallet of every sportsman. Muskie fishing and turkey hunting are my two passions, and I spend time looking for those books on these topics that I don't have or simply can't afford. I maintain lists of books I need. Some books are author signed, and many are not. Some books I need are low-priced and common and a few are expensive. Books allow people who can't afford a fishing or hunting trip to pour themselves into a good book and come out the other side knowing they've experienced something grand and wonderful while learning something they didn't know before.I buy fishing & hunting books, preferably yours.
Most of you know I buy and sell fishing and hunting books. I still read, everything from a cereal box to a mystery to a nonfiction fishing or hunting book. Some people don't know what they want, and they contact me and we discuss it by email.
Books are the gift that keeps on giving. Christmas is is a long way off but Father's Day is coming, and instead of a goofy power tie for work, take his mind off work with a book on a topic of interest to him. Buying gifts now removes the panic that sets in if you forget to shop. Take a look at my books on Scoop's Books. Go to my Home Page, scroll down and click on the photo of me that states Scoop's Books, and take a look around. If you need a specific title that isn't listed, email and ask if I have it. If you think of selling fishing or hunting books, try me. I buy books all the time, and you may have what I'm looking for. I'll be gone for three weeks beginning June 1. If you're looking for and find a book you want for a gift, make certain you order before May 26. Write to me first at <daverichey.com> to see if the book is still available. Reading a good book may not be quite as exciting as actually catching a fish or taking a big buck with a bow, but when travel to do these things become prohibitive in these economic doldrums, reading about fishing and hunting beats whatever else could come in second-best.
Jack O'Malley Interview w/ Dave Richey